Results

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Results displayed by award category; sort is chronological
indicates a win; links to acceptance speech

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{"General Dolgorucki [Grand Duke Sergius Alexander]"};
and
{"August Schilling"}
--
{"Diane"};
{"Angela"};
and
{"The Wife"}
[NOTE: For this awards year, awards were presented in the name of the individual and could honor work on one or more films. Charles Rosher and Karl Struss were both honored for cinematography on this film. It is considered a single nomination for the film.]
[NOTE: For this awards year, awards were presented in the name of the individual and could honor work on one or more films. Charles Rosher and Karl Struss were both honored for cinematography on this film. It is considered a single nomination for the film.]
[NOTE: This award was not associated with any specific film title.]
[NOTE: "The Academy Board of Judges on merit awards for individual achievements in motion picture arts during the year ending August 1, 1928, unanimously decided that your name should be removed from the competitive classes, and that a special first award be conferred upon you for writing, acting, directing and producing The Circus. The collective accomplishments thus displayed place you in a class by yourself." (Letter from the Academy to Mr. Chaplin, dated February 19, 1929.)]
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{"The Cisco Kid"}
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
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{"Norma Besant"}
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
[NOTE: The award citation reads 'for 'The Bridge of San Luis Rey' and other pictures.' THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
[NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN OFFICIAL NOMINATION. There were no announcements of nominations, no certificates of nomination or honorable mention, and only the winners (*) were revealed during the awards banquet on April 3, 1930.]
--
{"Benjamin Disraeli"}
[NOTE: As allowed by the award rules for this year, a single nomination could honor work in one or more films. Though the final awards ballot listed both Disraeli and The Green Goddess in his nomination, the award was announced for only the Disraeli performance. It has never been established as to why this was, but it possibly could have been because the original report from the Acting Branch Board of Judges only listed the Disraeli performance in the results of the nominations voting, or it could have been because on some of the final ballots, the voters had indicated the Disraeli performance over the other.]
[NOTE: As allowed by the award rules for this year, a single nomination could honor work in one or more films. Though the final awards ballot listed both The Divorcee and Their Own Desire in her nomination, the award was announced for only the The Divorcee performance. It has never been established as to why this was, but it possibly could have been because the original report from the Acting Branch Board of Judges only listed The Divorcee performance in the results of the nominations voting, or it could have been because on some of the final ballots, the voters had indicated the The Divorcee performance over the other.]
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{"Champ"}
[NOTE: A tie. Mr. Beery had one vote less than Fredric March (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde), and rules at the time stated that if any achievement came within three votes of the First Award, it would be considered a tie.]
--
{"Dr. Henry Jekyll/Mr. Hyde"}
[NOTE: A tie. Wallace Beery (The Champ) had one vote less than Mr. March, and rules at the time stated that if any achievement came within three votes of the First Award, it would be considered a tie.]
[NOTE: This award was not associated with any specific film title.]
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{"Father Flanagan"}
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{"Julie Morrison"}
[NOTE: This is the only year that nominations were announced for the Thalberg award.]
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{"Scarlett O'Hara"}
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{"Kitty Foyle"}
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{"Alvin C. York"}
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{"Lina McLaidlaw"}
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{"George M. Cohan"}
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{"Kay Miniver"}
[NOTE: "A special award to Battle of Midway for the historical value of its achievement in offering a camera record of one of the decisive battles of the world - a record unique both for the courage of those who made it under fire, and for its magnificent portrayal of the gallantry of our armed forces in battle."]
[NOTE: "A special award to Kokoda Front Line! for its effectiveness in portraying, simply yet forcefully, the scene of war in New Guinea and for its moving presentation of the bravery and fortitude of our Australian comrades in arms."]
[NOTE: "A special award to Moscow Strikes Back for its vivid presentation of the heroism of the Russian Army and of the Russian people in the defense of Moscow, and for its achievement in so doing under conditions of extreme difficulty and danger."]
[NOTE: "A special award to Prelude to War for its trenchant conception and authentic and stirring dramatization of the events which forced our nation into the war and of the ideals for which we fight."]
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{"Kurt Muller"}
--
{"Bernadette Soubirous"}
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{"Father O'Malley"}
--
{"Paula Alquist"}
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{"Don Birnam"}
--
{"Mildred Pierce"}
"On The Atchison, Topeka And The Santa Fe"
from
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--
{"Anthony John"}
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{"Hamlet"}
--
{"Belinda McDonald"}
--
{"Catherine Sloper"}
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was So Much for So Little.]
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was A Chance to Live.]
--
{"Cyrano de Bergerac"}
--
{"Will Kane"}
"High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin')"
from
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{"Princess Anne"}
[NOTE: The screen credit and award were originally credited to Ian McLellan Hunter, who was a "front" for Dalton Trumbo. On December 15, 1992, the Academy's Board of Governors voted to change the records and award Mr. Trumbo with the achievement. Ian McLellan Hunter's name was removed from the Motion Picture Story category. The Oscar was posthumously presented to Trumbo's widow on May 10, 1993.]
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{"Georgie Elgin"}
--
{"Marty Pilletti"}
--
{"Serafina Della Rose"}
[NOTE: For the 29th Academy Awards, the name(s) of the producer(s) were included in the nomination for the Foreign Language Film category.]
[NOTE: The name of the writer credited with authorship, Robert Rich, turned out to be an alias. Two decades later, the mystery was officially solved and the Academy statuette went (on May 2, 1975, presented by then Academy president Walter Mirisch) to its rightful owner, screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, blacklisted in 1956 by the industry for political affiliations. Robert Rich (who had nothing to do with the film industry) is a nephew of the King Brothers, producers of the film. They chose his name to be the alias for Dalton Trumbo on the screenplay.]
--
{"Eve White/Eve Black/Jane"}
[NOTE: Though Pierre Boulle received official screen credit, it was commonly known that blacklisted writers, Michael Wilson and Carl Foreman, wrote the screenplay based on Mr. Boulle's novel (translated from the French). The Board of Governors, on December 11, 1984, voted posthumous Oscars to Wilson and Foreman and Academy records have been updated.]
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{"Major Pollock"}
--
{"Barbara Graham"}
[NOTE: Upon request of his widow and upon recommendation of the Writers Branch Executive Committee, the Board of Governors voted on June 22, 1993, to restore the name of Nedrick Young to the nominations and award presented to Nathan E. Douglas (Mr. Young's pseudonym during the blacklisting period).]
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{"Judah Ben-Hur"}
--
{"Elmer Gantry"}
--
{"Gloria Wandrous"}
[NOTE: Originally, the three names of Jean Bourgoin, Henri Persin and Walter Wottitz (as listed on the Official Screen Credits form) were announced as nominees for this film in this category. The credits from the film listed four Directors of Photography (in the following order), Mr. Persin, Mr. Wottitz, Pierre Levent and Mr. Bourgoin. The program for the Awards ceremony and even the official letter from Price Waterhouse with the results of the final voting for the awards listed the three names as winners in this category. At some point, the name of Henri Persin was dropped from the nomination, as his name has been "whited-out" from the official wording for the nomination certificates, and the nominations and winners lists the Academy publishes do not include his name. The Academy's records and files give no reason for this exclusion.]
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{"Professor Henry Higgins"}
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{"Mary Poppins"}
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{"Kid Shelleen/Tim Strawn"}
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{"Diana Scott"}
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{"Police Chief Bill Gillespie"}
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{"Charly Gordon"}
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{"Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine"}
[NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Barbra Streisand (Funny Girl).]
--
{"Fanny Brice"}
[NOTE: A tie. The other winner in this category was Katharine Hepburn (The Lion in Winter).]
[NOTE: At the 41st Awards ceremony on April 14, 1969, Young Americans was announced as the winner of the Documentary Feature Oscar. On May 7, 1969, the film was declared ineligible after it was revealed that the film had played in October of 1967, therefore ineligible for a 1968 Award. The first runner-up, Journey into Self, was awarded the statuette on May 8, 1969.]
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{"Rooster Cogburn"}
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{"General George S. Patton, Jr."}
[NOTE: Mr. Scott refused the award.]
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{"Gudrun Brangwen"}
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{"Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle"}
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{"Bree Daniel"}
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{"Don Vito Corleone"}
[NOTE: Mr. Brando refused the award.]
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{"The Master of Ceremonies"}
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{"Sally Bowles"}
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{"Harry Stoner"}
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{"Randle Patrick McMurphy"}
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Down and Out in America.]
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Artie Shaw: Time Is All You've Got.]
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{"Loretta Castorini"}
"Sooner Or Later (I Always Get My Man)"
from
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[NOTE: The Academy's Board of Governors voted to confer this award on January 12, 1993. Ms. Hepburn passed away on January 20th, and the award was accepted on her behalf by her son, Sean Hepburn Ferrer.]
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Trevor.]
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Franz Kafka's It's a Wonderful Life.]
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{"Brandon Teena/Teena Brandon"}
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{"Maximus Decimus Meridius"}
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{"Nina Sayers/The Swan Queen"}
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Zero Dark Thirty.]
[NOTE: A tie. The other winning film in this category was Skyfall.]
Note: Names and film titles in the Academy Awards Database are derived from film credits and other documentation submitted to the Academy at the time of nomination or award. Changes to name forms or other information contained in the Database may be considered upon request, with respect to preservation of the historical record and the nominee/award recipient.